Even if you don't yet speak the language fluently, Spanish can be highly accessible in the written form. If you understand most of the words in a text, then it is often possible to deduce the meaning of an unknown word. When you do need to look a word up in the dictionary, one obstacle can be that the dictionary may not list the exact form that you find in the text. But a few basic rules of thumb can help you find the word and work out its meaning without a detailed knowledge of Spanish grammar.
Perhaps one of the biggest obstacles to reading Spanish is its verb system. Spanish, like other associated languages (but unlike English) has a somewhat synthetic verb system: in other words, Spanish verbs can have a whole host of distinct forms. However, as a practical way of beginning to read Spanish more proficiently, a strategy to consider is to (a) learn the most base irregular verb forms outright, along with the typical idiomatic meanings they may carry; (b) learn a few rules of thumb to allow you to deduce the person/tense, and if vital look up, most other verb forms.
Electronic Dictionary
So turning first to base verb forms, which should you in effect learn? Out of a sample of 2,000 Spanish newspaper and magazine articles, the following are among the most base verb forms:
(1) ha combines with someone else verb, and means "he/she/it has..."; the following word will usually end in -ado or -ido, and will be the equivalent of an English form ending in -ed (technically called the 'past participle'). To look this past participle up in the dictionary, you generally replace the final -do with -r. For example, if you see ha preguntado, the form to look up in the dictionary is preguntar. You'll see that this means "to ask", and thus ha preguntado means "he/she asked". Roughly 50% of the sample articles contained this construction!
(2) han, occuring in nearly 30% of the sample articles, is the plural equivalent of ha and means "they have...".
(3) fue and dijo generally mean was and said respectively, and are the simple past tenses of the verbs ser ("to be") and decir ("to say"). The plural forms are fueron and dijeron, meaning "they were" and "they said" respectively.
(4) había is an imperfect tense form often used to mean "there was/were...".
(5) hizo is a simple past form of the verb hacer, and generally means "he/she/it did", "he/she/it made".
(6) podría is a conditional form of the verb poder, meaning "to be able"; the form podría is often equivalent to English "could", "may be able to";
(7) sido is the past participle of the verb ser: in other words, it in effect means been, and is often combined with ha or han mentioned above (e.g. Ha sido... = he/she/it has been...);
(8) fuera is a form generally referred to as the past subjunctive: it means was/were when expressing a hypothetical condition, as in si fuera... ("if he/she/it were..."); traditionally, this form might not be learnt until late on in a Spanish course, but it in effect occurs in 6% of the articles surveyed.
A large proportion of the lookups submitted to my own on-line Spanish-Engish dictionary are from this list of highly base verb forms. In other words, there is evidence that many readers could heighten their reading fluency simply by being more judicious about which word forms they choose to learn in advance. As you can see, we're in effect cutting across a whole host of grammar topics that, as part of learning to speak Spanish fluently, you would need to address more fully. But treating these very base verb forms on a case-by-case basis is simply suggested as a pragmatic reading strategy.
For decoding verbs in general, an on-line or electronic dictionary such as the one I mention can help a great deal. Given most verb forms, the dictionary will understand the form and take you to the corresponding entry. However, it will still heighten your reading fluency to know some base rules of thumb, such as:
- The "he/she/it" gift tense forms of verbs ends in either -a (replace with -ar to look up in the dictionary) or -e (replace with -er or -ir).
- The "they" form ends in -an (replace wtih -ar) or -en (replace with -er or -ir) in the gift tense. (Every single "they" form in the language ends in -n in any case.)
- If the verb form has an ending beginning in -aba (e.g. Preguntaban), then you have a past tense form; replace the part beginning with -aba with -r. So in this case, the verb is preguntar; the meaning is "they were asking", "they used to ask"-- notice the final -n marking the they form.
- A verb ending with -ía is the equivalent to -aba, but for verbs ending in -er or -ir. So for example, comía comes from the verb comer, meaning "to eat" (so comía would likely mean "he/she was eating", "he/she used to eat").
- However, the ending -ría (notice the 'r') is generally equivalent to English "would...". In this case, remove -ía, -ían etc to get the base verb. So preguntaría means "he/she would ask".
- A word ending in -ó is probably a "he/she/it" simple past tense form; replace -ó with -ar, and -ió with -er or -ir, to find the base verb.
- The they simple past tense forms end in -ron, and specifically usually -aron (replace with -ar to look up the verb) or -ieron (replace with -er or -ir).
I hope I've suggested, then, how with a slight bit of judicious learning, you can develop a strategy for understanding Spanish articles of some complexity. With such a strategy, reading will help you gain new vocabulary and above all be more useful and enjoyable.
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